Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byDorthy Pierce Modified over 9 years ago
1
Sect. 7-3: Work Done by a Varying Force
2
Work Done by a Varying Force For a particle acted on by a varying force, clearly is not constant! For a small distance ℓ 1 along the curve, the work done is approximately W 1 = F 1 ℓ 1 cosθ 1 For a small distance ℓ 2 the work done is approximately W 2 = F 2 ℓ 2 cosθ 2 For a small distance ℓ i, along the curve, the work done is approximately W i = F i ℓ i cosθ i The total work over 7 segments is approximately
3
For a force that varies, the work can be approximated by dividing the distance up into small pieces, finding the work done during each, and adding them up.
4
In the limit that the pieces become infinitesimally narrow, the work is the area under the curve, which is the integral of Fcosθ over the distance ℓ Or:
5
See text for details. Requires that you know simple integral calculus. In one dimension, for F = F(x), the bottom line is that the work done is the integral of the F vs. x curve: W = ∫ F(x) dx (limits x i to x f ) For those who don’t understand integrals, this is THE AREA under the F vs. x curve
6
Work Done by an Ideal Spring Force An ideal spring is characterized by a spring constant k, which is measure of how “stiff” the spring is. The “restoring force” F s is: F s = -kx (F s > 0, x 0) This is known as Hooke’s “Law” (but it isn’t really a law!)
7
Applied Force F app is equal & opposite to the force F s exerted by block on spring: F s = - F app = -kx
8
Force Exerted by a Spring on a Block Force F s varies with block position x relative to equilibrium at x = 0. F s = -kx spring constant k > 0 x > 0, F s < 0 x = 0, F s = 0 x 0 F s (x) vs. x
9
Example: Measuring k for a Spring Hang a spring vertically. Attach an object of mass m to the lower end. The spring stretches a distance d. At equilibrium, Newton’s 2 nd Law says: ∑F y = 0 so, mg – kd = 0 or mg = kd If we know m, & measure d, k = (mg/d) Example: d = 2.0 cm = 0.02 m m = 0.55 kg k = 270 N/m
10
W = (½)kx 2 Relaxed Spring Spring constant k x = 0 x W W In (a), the work to compress the spring a distance x: W = (½)kx 2 So, the spring stores potential energy in this amount. W In (b), the spring does work on the ball, converting it’s stored potential energy into kinetic energy. W W
11
Plot of F vs. x. The work done by the person is equal to the shaded area.
12
Example 7-5: Work done on a spring a. A person pulls on a spring, stretching it x = 3.0 cm, which requires a maximum force F = 75 N. How much work does the person do? b. Now, the person compresses the spring x = 3.0 cm, how much work does the person do?
13
Example 7-6: Force as a function of x where F 0 = 2.0 N, x 0 = 0.0070 m, and x is the position of the end of the arm. If the arm moves from x 1 = 0.010 m to x 2 = 0.050 m, how much work did the motor do? A robot arm that controls the position of a video camera in an automated surveillance system is manipulated by a motor that exerts a force on the arm. The dependence of the force on the position x of the robot arm is measured & found given by
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.